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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Nor California & Pac NW
Posts: 24,802
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Pedal Powered Boats
Every year I follow the Race To Alaska (R2AK.com). The human powered racers are the most awe-inspiring, to me. By the time they get to Ketchikan, their hands look absolutely reckt.
I’m wondering why the human-powered boats are never pedal powered. It seems to me that your legs are the part of your body that were evolved to work non-stop for days on end, as primitive us followed big game animals until they were exhausted and cornered. I realize the combination of legs, core, and arms that is rowing is the most power the human body can generate, but I don’t think our core was evolved to work non-stop for hours and days on end. We’re upright walkers, after all. And arms . . .
Looking online for pedal powered kayaks, cats, sculls, etc turns up 1) interesting backyard experiments, 2) obscure racing boats - even hydrofoils!- clearly designed for sprints, 3) the occasional custom built boat meant to set a record for human-powered crossings, and 4) most common, the fisherman’s kayak with Hobie “flipper” drive.
Has anyone had experience with pedal drive boats in the ocean?
In addition to power and endurance, it seems like a recumbent pedal drive would be the most aero human powered boat (the racers are usually moving upwind).
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211
What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”?
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